GEORGE L. CROOKHAM
Pg. 67
Occasionally young men would secure
employment here and remain permanently. Of the number were
John Kight and George L. Crookham, who came to the licks
in 1799. The latter became one of the leading men of the
settlement and lived in the county until his death. He was
born at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Nov. 18, 1779. He had a taste
for learning and soon qualified himself to teach. When only
twenty years of age he came to the licks and went to work at a salt
furnace. But he kept up his studies. Even at night,
while watching the kettles, he pursued his studies, and John
Farney is au-
[pg. 69]
thority for the statement that he included astronomy among them.
Mathematics engaged his attention the oftenest, but he was a student
of Nature and her works, even down to insects. In 1812 he
volunteered for the war, and rendered his country valuable service,
for which he received in later years a land warrant. He was a
great lover of freedom, and when the slavery question began to
attract attention in 1836 he became an Abolitionist. This made
him very obnoxious to many of his neighbors, and that led to an act
of incendiarism, which disgraced the county and lost to posterity a
very valuable book. He had a school house on his farm, two
miles west of Jackson, where he taught the children of the
neighborhood. In this little house he kept his library, his
collection of curiosities and relics, and a manuscript history of
the salt works from the earliest days. One night the building
was fired by some pro-slavery people, and it was destroyed with all
its contents. Mr. Crookham was the father of sixteen
children, fourteen of whom survived him. He died Feb. 28,
1857, at the home of his son-in-law, J. W. Hanna, east of
Jackson, the most learned man in the county, and respected by all.
The bells of the town were tolled on the day of his funeral.
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